| Roberta Wohlstetter - History - 1962 - 454 pages
...an understanding with Great Britain and the Netherlands; and in short if everything can be finished, we have decided to wait until that date. This time...before. This, for the present, is for the information of you two Ambassadors alone.46 On November 24, in the last of the deadline messages, Tokyo reminded... | |
| Homer Norman Wallin - Pearl Harbor (Hawaii) - 1968 - 404 pages
...an understanding with Great Britain and the Netherlands; and in short if everything can be finished, we have decided to wait until that date. This time...ever have before. This, for the present, is for the informtion of you two Ambassadors alone. [Trans. 11/22/41] 6 From Washington to Tokyo 27 November 1941:... | |
| United States. Department of Defense - Japan - 1978 - 556 pages
...an understanding with Great Britain and the Netherlands; and in short if everything can be finished, we have decided to wait until that date. This time...before. This, for the present, is for the information of you two Ambassadors alone. "See IV, 44, Tokyo wires Washington that because of the various circumstances... | |
| Michael Slackman - History - 1991 - 372 pages
...you can f1nish your conversations with the Americans; if the signing can be completed by the 19th ... we have decided to wait until that date. This time...changed. After that things are automatically going to happen.12 These indications from Magic that Japan was preparing for war served only to conf1rm what... | |
| Michael Slackman - History - 1990 - 376 pages
...you can finish your conversations with the Ameticans; if the signing can be completed by the 19th ... we have decided to wait until that date. This time...deadline absolutely cannot be changed, After that things ate automatically going to happen. 11 These indications ftom Magic that Japan was prepating for war... | |
| Jeffrey Richelson - History - 1995 - 548 pages
...completion of negotiations to November 29. The decrypted message stated: "This time we mean it ... the deadline absolutely cannot be changed. After that things are automatically going to happen."80 A November 28 message, intercepted and translated that same day, indicated that negotiations... | |
| Robert A. Theobald, John T. Flynn - Pearl Harbor (Hawaii), Attack on, 1941 - 1996 - 132 pages
...in short, if everything can be finished, we have decided to wait until that date. This time we meant it, that the deadline absolutely cannot be changed....before. This, for the present, is for the information of you two Ambassadors alone." Again on November 24, 1941, Tokyo specifically instructed its ambassadors... | |
| Charles Merlin Umpenhour - Capitalism - 2005 - 568 pages
...intercepted Japanese communication. The message insinuated with respect to the trade negotiations, "This time we mean it, that the deadline absolutely cannot be changed. After that [November 29th] things are automatically going to happen" (Shirer, 1992, p. 1160). Roosevelt increased... | |
| Donald E. Schmidt - History - 2005 - 386 pages
...straits of the doomed diplomatic negotiations: "This time we mean it, that the deadline (November 29) absolutely cannot be changed. After that things are automatically going to happen." 3 • Between November 15 and December 6, 129 radio intercepts of the Japanese convoy steaming across... | |
| Greg Cashman, Leonard C. Robinson - History - 2007 - 436 pages
...informed Nomura on November 22 that it had agreed to extend the deadline four days, until November 29: "This time we mean it, that the deadline absolutely...After that, things are automatically going to happen" (Wohlstetter 1962, 189-90). The note was translated by MAGIC on the same day. Policymakers in Washington... | |
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